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Instruments from the Middle East
The Middle East is located at the eastern rim of the Mediterranean,
stretching from Turkey in the northeast to Egypt in the southeast.
Moving clockwise on a map, the Middle Eastern countries with
Mediterranean coastlines are Turkey, Syria, Lebanon, Israel,
and Egypt. The region also stretches inland to the Caspian
Sea in the northeast, beyond the Persian Gulf to the southeast,
and as far as the Indian Ocean to the south. It takes in Iran,
Iraq, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, the United
Arab Emirates, Oman, and Yemen. In broad terms, the Middle
East separates Europe from Asia and continental Africa. In
cultural and linguistic terms, the region extends across the
countries of north Africa, known as the Maghreb (meaning "west"
in Arabic). These are Egypt, Libya, Tunisia, Algeria, and
Morocco.
The countries of the Middle East are mostly Arab and Arabic-speaking.
Historically, they were nearly all part of the medieval Muslim
Empire that controlled the western and southern Mediterranean
between the seventh and fifteenth centuries-and they were
nearly all part of the Ottoman Empire which succeeded it and
only started to break up toward the end of the nineteenth
century. Most of the Middle East is Muslim. But it would be
wrong to believe that this region shares a cultural uniformity.
Turks are not Arabs, and most Iranians are Persians, not Arabs.
Although Iran is now strictly Muslim, the old country of Persia
was at various times both Zoroastrian and, to an extent, Christian.
Israel is neither Arab nor Islamic, it is Jewish, though it
has a large Arab population. The countries of the Maghreb
are a mix of indigenous Berbers, sub-Saharan Africans, and
Arabs.
The music of the Middle East has evolved out of four historically
linked musical cultures: Arab, Persian, Turkish, and Maghrebi.
The common link between them is the Mediterranean. Historically
the busiest sea in the world, the Mediterranean is the medium
through which nations and peoples conquered each other, traded
with each other, spoke to each other, and sang to each other.
"Who would willingly roam across a salty waste so vast, so
endless?" asked Homer in The Odyssey. The answer, evidently,
is everyone who ever had a ship to sail in. It is impossible
to discuss one Mediterranean culture without mentioning another,
which influenced it through trade, war, or immigration. People
travel, words travel, and music travels.
Dumbek
One of the greatest
travelers is a drum. Throughout the Middle East, we find a
drum called the dumbek. There are many variations in
the word's pronunciation-darbuka in the Maghreb, drbekki
in Lebanon and Syria, tonbak or dumbek in Iran,
and dumbelek in Turkey. But they all describe the same
instrument: a goblet-shaped drum that is usually played under
the arm. (It is worth noting that other eastern Mediterranean
countries have very similar words for very similar drums:
the Yugoslavian darbuk, the Albanian darbuke,
the Greek toubeleki, and the Macedonian tarabuka
are all goblet-shaped drums.)
The Middle Eastern dumbek can be made of clay, wood, or
metal, and comes in a variety of sizes. It has a single head,
which is made of stretched goatskin, sheepskin, or fish skin.
Traditional dumbeks are not tuned, and the heads are either
tied or glued to the body. In contrast, professional drums
may have tunable heads made of plastic or mylar, screwed down
on an aluminium or beaten metal body. Generally, the head
of the Middle Eastern dumbek is less heavy than that of the
African djembe, and it is played with a more nimble
touch. The fingers are used, rather than the palms, and the
strokes and techniques of playing are quite different. The
dumbek is used in both classical and folk music throughout
the Middle East.
Tradition says that the dumbek is so called because the
word is a rough combination of the drum's two basic sounds:
"dum" and "tek." The "dum" is made by striking the drum's
most resonant area with the dominant hand, producing a round
ringing tone. The "tek" is the sound of the dominant hand
hitting the rim. In musical notation these sounds are represented
by "d" and "t." If the stroke is accentuated, these letters
appear upper case. The same applies to "ka" ("k"), the sound
of the recessive hand striking the rim. "Grab" is produced
when the dominant hand strikes the center of the drum head
with the fingers and palm cupped to trap the sound, and remains
on the drumhead. "Slap" is similar to grab, except that the
hand is not cupped. "Trill" is the sound of three fingers
of the same hand tapping the rim with alacrity. "Roll" is
the quick interchanging of "teks" and "kas."
One of the more common rhythms played on the dumbek is a
complex pattern in 12/8, with emphases on the first, fifth,
sixth, ninth and tenth beats and a grab on the twelfth. This
is known as debke, and it originated in Lebanon as
an accompaniment to a folk line dance. Ayyub, a 2/4
rhythm pattern, originated in Egypt as a religious rhythm
to protect against evil. A little faster, it becomes the traditional
accompaniment to belly dance. Baladi, saidi, and maqsoum
are common 4/4 rhythms, and chiftitelli is a hypnotic
Turkish dance rhythm in 8/8 time. In Turkish masmoudi,
the two hands "argue" with one another in a virtuoso display
of one-upmanship.
Taar
Another drum which has
traveled throughout the region and beyond is the taar.
The taar, also known as the def, is a large frame-drum,
originally from Egypt and the Sudan. It is probably the most
common percussion instrument of the region, and is historically
the drum favored by the Bedouin. Not unlike the Irish bodhrán
in appearance, the taar is about four inches deep and fourteen
to twenty-four inches across. Traditionally, the single drumhead
is sheepskin or goatskin. The drum is held in one hand like
a tambourine, and struck with the other, although for some
purposes it may be beaten with a stick. Traditionally, the
player holds the taar in front of him, with the drumhead facing
out. The drum has a deep, singing resonance, and is capable
of an immense variety of tonal effects. Its range of moods
is very broad: in Kurdistan, the taar accompanies both the
solemn verses that are recited at funerals and the rhythms
that accompany the wild festival dance known as the dilok.
The techniques of taar playing are similar to those of the
dumbek. "Dum," "tek" and "grab" (or "pa," in the case of the
taar) form the basic vocabulary-and that vocabulary stretches
into virtuoso areas of curving, muting, and "singing," which
bring the taar closer to the human voice than virtually any
other drum in the world.
Other Instruments from the Middle East
Throughout the Middle East, the dumbek and the taar are
often played in ensembles with a variety of string and wind
instruments. The buzuq, originally an Iraqi instrument
of ancient origin, is popular throughout the region. It is
a long-necked, fretted lute, very similar, as the name suggests,
to the Greek bouzouki. The ginbri, of Moroccan
origin, is a three-string bass with a long, cylindrical neck
and a skin-covered sound box. The kaman, a vertical
fiddle originally from Persia, is popular all over the Middle
East-as is the western fiddle. The lotar, a Berber
lute with a round body, has been adopted and adapted by every
Middle Eastern country. The qanun is a flat zither
with 26 strings which are plucked. The rabab, a spike
fiddle with one string, traditionally accompanies poetry.
Probably the most distinguished string instrument of all,
and the most widespread, is the oud, a fretless lute
with generally nine strings. Double-reeded shawms dominate
the Arab woodwinds. These include, among many others, the
Lebanese mijwiz, the Egyptian mizmar, the Iraqi
mitbiq and the Palestinian yarghul. The nay
and the salamiyyah are both flutes with very pure notes,
originally associated with Sufism-a mystical, meditative form
of Islam. A louder flute, the minjayrah, is enhanced
by the player's humming, and is used in dance music.
In the Islamic Middle East, the act of listening-sama-is
sacred. The act of creating music is not in itself sacred,
but the sounds of music imitate, and participate in, the harmony
of the universe. But the region has a rich variety of cultural
and tribal customs and practices. What may be deeply religious
in one area may accompany a belly dance in another. The intensely
dynamic musical heritage of the region is capable of accommodating
the entire range.
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